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?? POETRY. TRUM MO OHf 'ft 1UTIOVA1. ?CE 1,00TB*. Then fere the weU, mv own Ue*r Jove, *. Thi* world l *a n^for.us , - . The pain dear fore* The i?in of parting thus. ?V 'dNi-jw ?? tv- . . . i Had we but jbaowrvisioce firtt we met, ^SomebMypim&mnf* V>Ve might, in numbering them, forget "? deep>. detip pww oftfcfa? j}??r low, The deep, deep pain of this. /??* ;* / . -v ri V. . - *? .... - ,?? : But nofalaai we've never seen OfiogBnip^ofpkMure'ftW^ But et?U there came some cloud between, - - ^Andohaaed it a)} away, -dear love, ^ i . W^^d chased it4l)AW*r* 4. \ ' : ? ^YeE^en could tho*o tad jnomems ItaV '.?Fat^ dearer to V&T , hefrrt ' Wereboer* of fciieftogtjxher pa* ^ Than jMrsof minki^part, de^ilM, , ;? Than years of mtetbapait. * v .?? Fare well? our hope was bom in fears, c And nursed ?mid vajm regrets like winter aunt, h^roee in teara; .i - Cv hikt them* itpcears it seta, dear love, V dtito them, to teei* iteets* $ "s v ?.# Y . Advocate. mcirittn /V%^A?V?> iroHj Iti" -* w Sa i w? ^ ^ ? ???> i i >^Bw - ? ?>? ?- U ^tlUrnvw ? ? lentiyef frilein is required for x. At Jl _' A J. _*? MESTIC ECONOMY. LtM govern ! regulation iment of aXunily, aud f" - " ? ' T? ^ ' , occasions to complain of the want of attention aadsy stem to domestic concerns generally,, I- ' ? ? to the instruction of . -MRP AUt example of industry and ecoao la necetoary UM? exbib. - > to secure their happiness gh :llfe. Soiue parents think _ they acquit themselves if tliey treat their children tenderly, send ? school and give then plenty But, with an their good in fit iLINi pot grow ? 'fine merely *? ia^ li. . -M: ' ^Vk J'.i ,aji*euta cwU>ff*.ins N|t (lemadsatten * pot require ?Sfl U bsp ? ice, but simply weird* &kf ~ RPP^H union, whera young men or mm KJeHsMndu taught u thaueifrs.>'T-wo m ~ the only attraction wr " dren? tbe'lawor the ""*?) jwinise any vuw vantage to young men| ' see lawyers without gner^U.wkhwit * P^^shoemake# other mechanics, ? ortable, yet will their fool he shocked at the uame of an, and they Would rather is gentlemen, than iaboor a* ilea. ?? ? father who baa no frrtnne to, give ? his sons, and yet permits them to be Idle, without showing them the toad to Industry and wealth, M wanting in hia doty to himself, faw family and hia country. It probably will be sahl, in extenuation, that a son will not learn a trade, he has as aversion to -the labour and the name df a mechanic ? what then ie the dus Jw of a father? To submit to the in duleoce and ptide of hia ?vo? To (tamper him in extravagance, to nour ' tab him in idleness, to give him ?u. perflne coats and dandy neckcloths, that ha may stmt before a glass on walk in Broadway, and give himself the airs of a nu of fortune ? ? by no means, this is the weakness of % poor creature, not the firmness of a discreet and prudent man. Besides, Is it to be expected that a patent is to toil all his life to support the vanity and extravagance of uis sods, when, in fact, there is a period w ben bis sons should aid bin? Who would marry, t who would encounter the cares ef a largo . family, if it were not for the satisfaction of seeing chil dren grow up in usefulness, an orna ment to tbeir country, and valuable members of the.ouraniuuity ? Things are reversed, and a sou imagines thai Ms father b to support him all his [life time^iwhen be is in duty bound -to arrest tbe careaaml toils of bis' parent, and make bis declining years comfortable, ; 1 had laWly an illustration of two pictures of domestic arrangement and economy, and the .contrast struck me forcibly. A very respectable citizen invited me t(> dine with him on Sun day : he .was an industrious mau, with a large family, which he sup ported,. by bis daily exertions, and Contrived to Jive very well and main-, lain a good appearance;? his house, was famished with great neatness and simplicity? 'bis table plainly yet plentifully served; be gave -me no wine, hut substituted a glar or Uvo of sparkling cider ; he ba several daughters, modest and- well informed, . but I was AarticuUrly struck with; his four sons, ,d?e eldest about twenty. My family, >said he^ is large on Sunday? I take .-pectdiai; pleasure in having them around met on that day ; my eldest sop is a fhjjf carpenter, my second is a baker, jny. third is a mason, and the youngest is just indentured toa Cabinet makers ' 4 J expired, in the interest of their fortunes, I hope to share ,it*with them; i have laboured Jongfeto ? and hereafter they roust reciprocate., TWs was prudenL this was proper : the yonng n?en had each en intelli gent .look ? their faces were some what tanned by working. in the sun, end their band* probably hard, but they were healthy, lively ami modest ?they appoared like the pillars -of the house, the sure, the safe reliance of their parents in advenity^-they were worth a score of dandies. ? . Such men are looked, up to in the hour of peril, to defend their counat try. Industry can have no higher eulogy. A-v 4 The reverse of this picture vr?M| ly equally as large, and a father i? aa poor and industrious? he -do forbme- to give liis children, and even "their education had been aa [plain as possible; the sons had nei ther trade nor profession, neither talent nor industry, neither roodeto; nor enterprise : the eldest did nothing j loll about in indolence, dress ' a dandy coat, look in tbe says) "his eyes and bis mouth stood ftjar"? the others had an equal txet* siooto labour, and the father not on ly has to (oil daily for the support of a lartoifara%, but also to dresS Utese renuemsu? each of.- whom should have a j?atr a>f canvass browsers on; and /worjking *t some useful trade : die consequence of this dire neglect cast alwaysbe foreseen; such young men wilt ever be a dead Weight upon | their parent^ of no possible use or profit to themselves- or to the Woa}d> .but fed gradually into vice and extra vagaitce? >-they ? eventually become mere .vagabonds on t he ve?mm unity. Row -easily tills can he Avoided by proper system and firmness. W lieu j a father cannot give ,'a fortune or a profession to his sen, lei him when his sen has attained a suitable age, send him forth to select a trade for himself and make ^Hbtfgator* upon hint to choose (his trade; and when his elect iouisjoade, .bind him to it for a term of years, and see that his son learns this mochanicarart, works daily, aud serves Ms time out faith felly; keep him to it forcibly? let: him encounter seme hardships gnu difteukiet whin jmuafb ?dA turn ? M car to hii coouUifttH as (be re sult of indole*! btUU. bach & courat, if / geoerallj nursocd, Would fpve us i bardy urn useful race of yoang men, and would enable pa-, rents to live comfortably in their de clining years, I have heaa&a young inan say thai such a trade was not gtnteel! Nonsense ? itis in the pow er of a young man, by his correct deportment, to make aqy trade gen teel. Jjook at Bedjamin Franklin and at Dati&)Miitteuh0use, and let alt sncb scruples vanish. ' When a young man is employed at a useful ^branch of business, the day glides swiftly and happily on labour gjveshim an appetite for his simple fare, and brings repose at night to his wearied limto-icjus sys tem is braced by toil, and Ids health is maiataine4 by occupation! and in time he becomes a useful; and> very probably a wealthy member of tins community, and, above all, be ie e ver indemmdent* ? _ r from 1L01 ttw Knquirer , March 8. FALLS OF MISSOURI. The fa I Is of Missouri are in north latitude 47 degrees; in west longi [tude 88 from W ashington city.? yPhey range wjjh the city of Quebec, the bead of the Mississippi, the Mandan villages, the .forks of Clark's river, and the mouth of the Coluui [hia; all of which an between the parallels 46 and 47.^ The falls are made by the decent [of ?he rivei' hm? apiccp of table land whiclt ites at the foot of the Rocky Mountains about jfifty miles Wide, and some hundreds in length' om north to south. IfThe river flowing from tbe south about six * hundred miles, following its bends, turn? to the east when it has arrived in the 4at|tude of 47 de grees, and descends froak the table land into the level county which spreads downwards to the centre *>f the valley of the Mississippi. The decent is effected in. a passage of"i8 mike, over three .principal falls and a multitude of cascades and rapids. The .first fall (looking down the river) has a perjtendicular pitch of twenty-six feet, the second of /ojrtv s even, the third of The ,vury#a cascades and rapids give a fortlier descant of About two burfdred&et, so that the entire fall Of the liver is about three hundred and si^ fectf its average breadth,! from Jbo head to the foot of thf.falls, about a quarter ?f a mile. ! ? $ov*?w Wjs was the M white ra&n that evwrtwbeld these feelings, and attracted by 4he distant roaring, fie hnrried on abeadof hie at 0ooD' on Tbursdaj; thb 18th of June, 1805. f'Jfrom tbe foot of the fells the river flows without obstruction, without a shoal or rapid tojjreak its navigation; to?>e, * distance in round pnubtls of tour thousand AllfUT ' Trr^"?^||MlKlBM The country about thefalls is em inently beautiful. Itis prairie as far as the aigbt-can reach, level to the south, and -broken Into |*ell*> and undulations to the north. The only trees saen are alone the border* of the w? and the creeks felling ipto it. The ntargme .of thewMwe cloth. 6d with serpentine Jpovea, msiking tbe course of Uie water As farts % eyejcan.?la*r It." ,^fbe.p# isoovawdl witbaabost, sweet grass, almut three inches high, on wbfcbfced vast herd# of deer, elk, antelope, -and buffalo, llie country akto abouada with forrwfl fllwals, and the rfetiMMth aranatit fowls. tiMffiTftfit- uf^T, k Ffom the head at the folk the taigtty ilso goes off level to the foot ofthflbououli^ dkMU about fifty ?nflrtudlrtictly visible from a piei <* ""kg ground, their tope white *?*"*>%? ?rea fotouisummer, white all between is men with verdure. m this? moon tains, due west, is ? gsp, communicating with a fruitful valley, through which an Indian road -lta^a to the folks of Clark's rivtr, distant about one hundred uiiles from the mountains. From the forks, Clark's river is navigalde, with some portages, to the Pacific Ocean, sa\ one thousand miles. The /alls of Missouri present a ^nuul position for .commanding the Indians vf the Rocky Mountains, protecting the opertuions of tUe fur trade, and covering the communica tions between the valley of tf*e Mis sissippi and the mou& of the Colum bia. As such fnay it soon be occu pies) by the arms of the republic, from the GfftUemen'* Magazine. MET noes or ?*BAU>MNG. The ancient Egyptians bail three wj|ys of embalming thpir dead, and artists vera particularly trained up /or that purpose f the most costly me thod was practised only ppon persons of high rank s of which sort are all the mummies that have remained en due 4ft the present tines* It was done by j&trapting the brains through the nostrils, ayqd injecting a ricbbalm in their stead ; then ope niug the bel ly and taking out the intestines; the cavity was washed with palm . wine impregnated with spices, and filled, with myreh^nd-Othei aiomatics; thU done, the body was laid ift nitre seventy days, at the end of wliichit taken .out, .cleaned and syathejil with fine linen, gummed aud orna mented with yarious , hieroglyphics, expressive of the_ depeased'd birth, character aqd rank. This process completed, the embalmer carried liomelbe hpdy, where it was placed in a coffin, .cut inhuman shape and then^enclused in aa outer case, and placed upright against the waft of the bury ing place belonging to t|ic family.- ? '???: Another less expensive methqd of embalming was by i meeting into all the cavities of tba body a certain di?r, solvent, which being suffered to rau off after a proper time, carried with it whatever was contained tbeaein li quified ; and then the t>ody thus purged being dried by the nitrpfis process as before the pperatioo w&? closed swathing, jfec. By the third aod lowest method of embalm ing whioh was only in use among the poor : they drenched the body with t'-" J?'. itwith nitre. WEfXlfiW? M 4 custom among tlieiq of pledging the dead bodies qf S:,w'S? themselve?~*T hey. paid extravagant honours to their fleceased . ancestors; der groui^ in wjwt. there are'?tre#t? or passages of compunction from one to auotlier (hat the dead might Cm far the Jtousier inRotm^ fi m tvpgtcai (Jfcwtiitii* , The ?i Miration hat aakceedcd ad mirably, nd will probably lead' to si ip ilnrpractica.ro the human wtject*. It ha# tuthertofrequcutly failed in the Tie JDotoureaux and o%tdis eaaea, either from the regeneration of the divided nerve producing a anion sad restoration of eensatioq, or from Um eftsct bfng produced by the ?welHngof the ends of the.cat nenre sufficient 4o effect the virion. But tfee oxcistea of twp inches in length, efbctaally prevents sych ? restoration of feeling. Mr.- Bewell, the well known atwUtant professor at the Ve-? terintty pollege, who has the exclu sive claim to this improvement, in thecoorae of the l**t 48 month* per* formed thia operation on above one hundred horse*, with unifonh tnc cess, except, perhape, two or three DaMa to which there ma greet orl ganical disease of the foot. AU though the operation require* the tfkiH oif Mi*, bewell, it m vwy aim'-' [pie. It consist* jin catting down uponlht nerve* whicb enter iho foot 1n contract with tiit small or large pastern joint, auj then reuio\iug a piece of the nerve. A few minutes alter the operation, the auiuial walks and trots like a sound horse, which just before could scarcely move at all, and then in ex* treiue pain. The principle is obvious ? it is that of removing the conduc tors of sensation from the seat of the disease to the braitu The division of the arteries accompanying the nerves is carefully avoided. Sports of the Field. ? The prevailing mania for . thisr amusement is neatly bit off, by the facetious Gpldsiqith in tlie following ludicroos description of a Cart Race : " W bether tbis contention between three carts of . different Parishes was promoted by a subscription among the nobility, or whether the Grand Jury, in council assem bled, bad gloriously combined to eu courage pjaustral merit, 1 cannot take upon me to determine; but certain it is, lite whole was conducted with (he utmost regularity and decorum, and the coni()any, which made a brilliant appearance, were universal* ly of opinion that tbe sport vvas high, the running fine, and the riders in* ' fluenped by no bribe, " ^t was run on -the road from Loudon to ^village called Brentford* between a turnip cart, a dust carl and a dung cad $ each of (be owners condescending to mount and be his own driver. Tbe odds St starting | were, tunt against dung, five to four ; after half a mile's going, the kdowiog ones found themselves alt - on the Wf&? aide, and it was turnip against the field, brasS.to silver. l <*Soon, howevet, the contest bp capie more doubtful : turnip indeed t^ept the way, but it was -perceived that dung bad the best bottom. .? The road re-echoed With the shouts of the spectators : dung against turnip, turnip against dung, was now the universal cry ; neck and neck ) owe road lighter, hut the other had more judgment. I could not particularly observe the ardor with which the Jhiraex - espoused the cajone of the different xideumbn this occasion ; ope was xharmed with the. unwashed beauties of dpgf auother was cap tivated with the petiliularv aanect.of tuqplgl ^Mtpflitiirjissv time un* fortunate gloomy dust, who can** whipping behind, was chpered 1 qr the encouragement of tone and pity .cif ^ &* & :W*I * Tlie contortion now continued for some time, without a possibility pf determining to whom victory do. signed the prize. The winning port1 appeared in view, mid lie who diovn tbetoroip celt assured himself oC bilious as he ; but upon approaching a torn from the toed, which lei homewards, the horse fhlrly stood still, Md refused to move a toot ft* tfctf The dung cart bad scarcely Hi/to enjoy tbis .temporary triumph vwhen it was pitched headlong into a iditch by the way-side, and the rider left to waito# la codgeniai mudr#* Bust fa the meantime men came up, and not being far from the post, cam# in amidst the shoo la and acclamations ford. Ftirtone was' kind only to one, who ought to have been favorable to all: each had peculiar merit, each labored hard to earn the prige, and each richly deserved the cart lje drove.'* -- - r Lord JVortk.? At the close ?f life he WAS afflicted with the total tofcef tight. At Bath lie met eol onel Berre, Who haAbeea his wano opponent in the house at oomtaeas, and was also blind'. Hon being in> troduced to each other, lord North aald, " Colonel, yoq and * h**? of ten been At varfaoeaf but I believe there are no people in Up world, - Vuteh Proverb.? The Dufeb have a good proverb: Ihofis never I ??nrioh, alms never impoverish -pray ers hinder.no wor)c, ' v ?>; J